Natural election
Natural election
The inherent desire of all things for all other things in a certain order. First employed by Francis Bacon (1561-1626) in a passage quoted by A. N. Whitehead (1861-) from the Silva Silvarum “there is a kind of election to embrace that which is agreeable and to exclude or expel that which is ingrate”. First erected into a philosophical principle by John Laird (1887-) in The Idea of Value, following a suggestion m Montaigne’s Essays. Value, considered as a larger category than human value, an ingredient of the natural world but regarded without its affective content. Syn. with objective value, as independent of the cognitive process. — J.K.F.